Chaya Brasserie
8741 Alden Drive
West Hollywood, CA
310-859-8833
As I drive west from downtown, past shut storefronts on Beverly Boulevard, the sky already dark, I feel winter closing in. I don't like the feeling. Once the sun goes down, Los Angeles retreats inside. The
valet parkers in front of restaurants along the way are the sole presence
on the street. As I nose the car toward Robertson Boulevard and its hip
boutiques, it is much the same. By the time I arrive in front of Chaya
Brasserie, I am half asleep myself.
Then suddenly, improbably, it's bright lights, big city: a flock of
people at the door, the bar packed with outgoing sorts, sipping and laughing and nibbling. After 17 years, this Euro-Asian restaurant is still the life of the party. The design, in fact, was so forward-looking
for the time that it doesn't seem a bit dated.
With a spacious bar up front, along with a half dozen tables where you can have dinner, it's a stylish and welcoming space. The dining room, which is larger than the bar might lead you to suspect, is dominated by a grove of bamboo stretching toward the ceiling. Seated at smart black
banquettes or linen-swathed tables is what can only be called an eclectic
crowd -- sassy young professionals, the usual
trying-too-hard-to-be-beautiful people, industry mavens, neighborhood
regulars and the occasional face you recognize from some film or other
but can't quite place. There are always a few Japanese tourists in the
mix, too, like the shy young newlyweds at the next table one night,
taking in L.A. on their honeymoon.
The lighting is a careful blend of fanciful Fortuny silk hanging lamps
and theater track lighting mounted on the rafters high above. The art
looks fresh and interesting: museum posters, an antique Chinese brocade
robe framed under glass and giant vintage prints of Chinese femme
fatales. In other words, it's East-West, which is exactly what's in style
today.
The servers would do a Paris brasserie proud. They're more
professional than many L.A. waiters, and they know how to move quickly,
too, which is imperative in a brasserie setting. I appreciate that the
minute you sit down, bread -- good bread -- arrives, along with the menus and
the wine list. This last is a real pleasure for its astute and varied
selection of wines from around the world. What's nice, too, is the short
list of half-bottles, which includes a terrific Sancerre from Domaine
Vacheron and Havens Syrah, "Carneros." You can also drink
sake if you're
so inclined. Prices are on the steep side, but nobody ever called Chaya
Brasserie a bargain. What matters more is that it's one of the more
consistently good restaurants around.
Chef Shigefumi Tachibe, who also created the menu at Chaya Venice and
at the new Chaya in San Francisco, lists his classic dishes on the left
side of the menu. Tops, I'd say, is the chicken Dijon, which makes about
the most comforting supper imaginable for less than $20. The free-range
bird is grilled, then finished off in a whole-grain Dijon mustard sauce
smoothed with a little cream, so that every bite of chicken is cloaked in
this subtle and delicious sauce. It also comes with a pile of good
frites. Also on that classic menu is Chaya's veal osso buco, which puts
versions at many an Italian restaurant to shame. Braised until the meat
is tender enough to fall off the bone, the sauce is grainy and robust,
flecked with vegetables and served up next to a gold saffron-infused
risotto.
To refresh its menu, Chaya has just installed an oakwood-fired grill,
and many of the items on the new autumn menu take advantage of the addition. Take the beautiful, meaty lamb chops, basically a rack of lamb that's been grilled, then cut apart to form the deep-rose chops. A roasted garlic jus sets off their flavor perfectly. Grilled filet mignon is excellent in a sauce enriched with black truffle puree. And the pan-roasted pork chop is splendidly juicy, enhanced by a reduction of apple cider. Roasted venison suits the spirit of the season, and Chaya's tastes aged and subtly gamy. It's a great choice if you plan on drinking a serious red wine.
As for appetizers, listen up when your waiter announces the few
specials. If you hear lobster sushi roll, jump at this combination of
rice, avocado, snowy white and coral lobster meat that's fired with
peppery daikon sprouts. Another sushi roll, spicy tuna and eel, is
richer, but just as appealing. Pear and pomegranate salad is a medley of
tart and sweet -- slivered, rather firm pears, pomegranate seeds and crisp
emerald watercress in a dried cranberry vinaigrette. The crab cake is a
single tall mound of finely shredded sweet-tasting crab meat (which is
what you'd expect from a Japanese chef) set down in a pool of deep-orange
roasted pepper sauce that really packs a punch.
Chaya's kitchen has always known how to treat
foie gras, and the new
peppered
foie gras on the menu, seared rare and presented on an unusual
apple polenta, is no exception. I also like the sauteed scallops napped
in black truffle sauce that crown a spring roll filled with mashed
potatoes. It's a beautiful match with a glass of Chardonnay or white
Burgundy.
Not everything is as successful. I'd pass on the seaweed salad, a green salad garnished with a few scraps of kelp. Chicken
miso rolls are pretty but dull, designed for somebody who's wary of strong tastes. Grilled king salmon is unfortunately overwhelmed by a caper brown butter vinaigrette. And some of the plating looks about as current as Joan Collins' shoulder pads from the "Dynasty" days. It's overblown, especially when an appetizer comes on an oversized plate with a wide
patterned border.
As for dessert, Chaya's version of crème brûlée is really a Napoleon,
and the contrast of the thick cream and the fragile sheaves of dough is lovely. Profiteroles with pistachio ice cream and chocolate sauce is a gleefully messy concoction that cries out to be shared. And who wouldn't like the warm brownie baked in an oval porcelain dish and served with whipped cream and raspberries?
With or without dessert, order the fragrant mint tea, served in a clear glass teapot stuffed with fresh mint leaves. This soothing tisane is a fitting finish to a lighthearted East-West evening at Chaya
Brasserie.
Specialties: lobster sushi roll, sautéed
foie gras with lingonberry sauce, chicken Dijon, oak-grilled lamb chops, pan-roasted king salmon, crème brûlée, fragrant mint tea.
S. Irene Virbila
Times Restaurant Critic
Hours: Mon.-Fri., 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Mon.-Thu. 6-10:30 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 6-11 p.m.; Sun., 6-10 p.m.
Venue Details
| Cuisine |
Asian Fusion
,
French
,
Italian
,
Japanese
|
| Rating |
|
| Ambience |
Smart, bustling brasserie with lively bar scene, weekday sushi happy hour and polished Euro-Asian food.
|
| Best dishes |
Pear and pomegranate salad, peppered foie gras with apple polenta, lobster sushi roll, crab cake, chicken Dijon, pan-roasted pork chop, oak-grilled lamb chops, osso buco, crème brûlée.
|
| Payment |
American Express
,
MasterCard
,
Visa
|
| Prices |
Appetizers, $8-$16. Main courses, $14-$29. Corkage, $15.
|
| Service |
Competent and swift.
|